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Water and chemical purification have never been so demanding. The separations industry is driven by these applications, as well as the need for
more effective waste material handling. The problem may be isolating a substance of commercial interest in the laboratory, purifying a drug or food
product, or cleaning nuclear waste from contaminated soil; a minute change in the yield of a costly drug can spell the difference between success and
failure; the ability to remove traces of toxic substances from waste streams. It all comes down to the separation and purification methods used. The
right technology choice can pay dividends in human safety and add dollars to the profit column. The aggregate market for all advanced novel
separations techniques is estimated at $1.5 billion in 2002. Growing at an average annual growth rate of 18.5% over the next five years, this market
is expected to reach nearly $3.5 billion by 2007. Electrically driven systems will comprise the bulk of this market, with an expected total of $2.45
billion in 2007. This anthology provides its readers with up-to-date information on the fast growing fields of high technology organic and molecular
separations, from classical techniques like electrophoresis to important new methods using supercritical fluids. The publication deals with the
measurement, monitoring and manipulation of biological and chemical processes, keeping one current in a promising industry with its
multibillion-dollar potential. It provides a review of the areas covering:
- Liquid and gel chromatography
- Supercritical fluid extraction
- Ion exchange
- Field flow fractionation
- Instrumentation
- Liquid membranes
- Electrophoresis
- Magnetic separation
- Bioreactors
- Process control and monitoring
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